Sigue a un famoso cazarrecompensas que se encuentra a su más grande enemigo, un jugador profesional y forajido que había enviado a la prisión años antes.Sigue a un famoso cazarrecompensas que se encuentra a su más grande enemigo, un jugador profesional y forajido que había enviado a la prisión años antes.Sigue a un famoso cazarrecompensas que se encuentra a su más grande enemigo, un jugador profesional y forajido que había enviado a la prisión años antes.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 3 nominaciones en total
Luis Chávez
- Esteban Romero
- (as Luis Chavez)
J.D. Garfield
- Luis Andrade
- (as JD Garfield)
Opiniones destacadas
With all the cheap B westerns lately, finally a decent one comes along.
The cast is superb. You can't beat Christoph Waltz. He does a great job as the bounty hunter. Rachel Brosnahan played her part as a strong female character. I really liked seeing Willem Dafoe in a new movie.
It has a good story. Complements to the writer, director and casting agency. The movie was entertaining to watch.
It didn't have that big Hollywood feel but I enjoyed it very much.
Coming from 50 years of watching a lot of westerns.
I'm afraid after the mishap with Alex Baldwins movie "Rust", we may never see another decent western.
The cast is superb. You can't beat Christoph Waltz. He does a great job as the bounty hunter. Rachel Brosnahan played her part as a strong female character. I really liked seeing Willem Dafoe in a new movie.
It has a good story. Complements to the writer, director and casting agency. The movie was entertaining to watch.
It didn't have that big Hollywood feel but I enjoyed it very much.
Coming from 50 years of watching a lot of westerns.
I'm afraid after the mishap with Alex Baldwins movie "Rust", we may never see another decent western.
I'd start by saying Waltz, Dafoe, Bratt and the others are great actors. All did a great job with what they had here. Problem is, not sure what they had here.
The scenes were a bit choppy and kept waiting for a tv commercial to play between them.
Pretty sure I nodded off at one point and missed some, but it made no difference.
This was a western, I think, but not one I'd recommend for western movie watchers. The actors are top notch but just couldn't save it.
I would have tried for a spaghetti western vibe over this 50s American tv series type. The scenes with Waltz and Dafoe were good but the writing, no sir, I didn't like it.
It was simply too elementary. Ah well, better luck next time.
The scenes were a bit choppy and kept waiting for a tv commercial to play between them.
Pretty sure I nodded off at one point and missed some, but it made no difference.
This was a western, I think, but not one I'd recommend for western movie watchers. The actors are top notch but just couldn't save it.
I would have tried for a spaghetti western vibe over this 50s American tv series type. The scenes with Waltz and Dafoe were good but the writing, no sir, I didn't like it.
It was simply too elementary. Ah well, better luck next time.
I read the poor reviews, and I think I saw a different movie. Either that, or those who don't like Westerns because . . . They're Westerns, decided to vent their frustrations after junk like Batgirl, The 4400 remake, the Bros flick, and the other Hollywood trendy junk people don't want fell flat. Who knows?
This is Walter Hill being Walter Hill. Gritty, realistic, devoid of Technicolor fluff. The landscape is unpleasant, uninviting, because that's what it is in this area of the southwest. People are living on the hard edge, because there isn't much else.
This tale, in the mold of The Professionals and The Wild Bunch, is not in the same category as The Undefeated. There's no sweetness and light, just the reality people of this era faced.
The acting is fine, the script is good, and the directing, that's Walter Hill. My only knock on this one, the same lighting and filtering used in the exteriors was applied to the interior shots in a way that's noticeable. That's not something one should notice.
This is Walter Hill being Walter Hill. Gritty, realistic, devoid of Technicolor fluff. The landscape is unpleasant, uninviting, because that's what it is in this area of the southwest. People are living on the hard edge, because there isn't much else.
This tale, in the mold of The Professionals and The Wild Bunch, is not in the same category as The Undefeated. There's no sweetness and light, just the reality people of this era faced.
The acting is fine, the script is good, and the directing, that's Walter Hill. My only knock on this one, the same lighting and filtering used in the exteriors was applied to the interior shots in a way that's noticeable. That's not something one should notice.
Sure, the film falls short in many aspects. Could have made better use of Willem Dafoe character, especially the demise scene. He had some great acting moments in this movie though, as if born for the Western. Always been a fan of Walter Hill, and this just being a Walter Hill film, raises it in my eyes. I enjoyed the script foe the most part, the acting, and the general pacing of the movie. It does feel a bit studio produced, with very crisp digitally feeling shots, not quite as dusty and dirty as maybe it should be. There is also a very minimalistic soundtrack, which makes the whole thing feel a bit like a TV movie. Still, it' s a enjoyable movie, reminiscent of the Spaghetti Westerns of old.
In old-school-style 1890's-based Western "Dead For A Dollar" Christoph Waltz & Warren Burke head to Mexico after Brandon Scott who's abducted (or ran off with) Rachel Brosnahan (excellent), wife of sleazy tycoon Hamish Linklater. They all converge (with Waltz's nemesis Willem Defoe) in a small dust-bowl town in the territory of crime-lord Benjamin Bratt & his gang (inc Luis Chávez) where shoot-out show-downs beckon. Stylishly shot in sepia tones by iconic veteran action writer / director Walter Hill (his first film in six yrs (and only second in ten)) it's simple & straight but decent fare, especially for those who don't necessarily need their Westerns to be 'modernized'.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaMatt Harris wrote this screenplay, originally titled "Moon of Popping Trees", in 2000. It won the Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting in 2002. However, he was unable to sell it, and it languished until his first produced screenplay, El estornino (2021), renewed interest in it. Director Walter Hill changed the title and rewrote it extensively.
- ErroresAt the 1:30:30 mark, when the riders on horseback is splitting up, the first rider to go towards the left has a walkie talkie or mic battery pack clearly visible on his left rear hip. Electronic devices wasn't around during the period portrayed by the movie.
- Citas
Max Borlund: I don't like being lied to and I don't like being used.
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- How long is Dead for a Dollar?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Moon of Popping Trees
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 81,403
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 47 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.55 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Dead for a Dollar (2022) officially released in Canada in English?
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